33 U.S.C. Chapter 1 — NAVIGABLE WATERS GENERALLY
- § 1— Regulations by Secretary of the Army for navigation of waters generally
- § 2— Regulations for navigation of South and Southwest Passes of Mississippi River; penalties
- § 3— Regulations to prevent injuries from target practice
- § 4— Water gauges on Mississippi River and tributaries
- § 5— Abolition of tolls on Government canals, canalized rivers, etc.; expense of operation, repairs to and reconstruction of canals, etc.; Panama Canal excepted; levies by non-Federal interest
- § 6— Free passage to harbor of Michigan City, Indiana
- § 7— Use of Government iron pier in Delaware Bay
- § 8— Toll free rivers in Alabama
- § 9— Des Moines River as toll free
- § 10— Waters in Louisiana Purchase as public highways
- § 11— Authority for compact between Middle Northwest States as to jurisdiction of offenses committed on boundary waters
- § 12— Port Arthur Ship Canal
- § 21— Bayou Cocodrie, Louisiana
- § 22— Bayou Meto, Arkansas
- § 23— Bear Creek, Mississippi
- § 24— Big Tarkio River, Missouri
- § 25— Cache River, Arkansas
- § 26— Calumet River, Cook County, Illinois, old channel
- § 26a— Additional portion of Calumet River, old channel, abandoned as navigable water
- § 26b— Portion of Calumet River, Chicago, as nonnavigable stream
- § 27— Chicago River at Chicago, Illinois
- § 27a— Chicago River, West Fork of South Branch
- § 27b— Chicago River, West arm of South Fork of South Branch
- § 28— Crum River; old channel at mouth, Delaware Bay
- § 29— Cuivre River, Missouri
- § 29a— East River, Wisconsin
- § 30— Grand River, Missouri, above Brunswick
- § 31— Iowa River, Iowa, above Toolsboro
- § 32— Lake George, Mississippi
- § 33— Little River, Arkansas, from Big Lake to Marked Tree
- § 34— Mill Slough, Oregon
- § 35— Mississippi River, West Channel, opposite La Crosse, Wisconsin
- § 36— Mosquito Creek, South Carolina
- § 37— Nodaway River, Missouri
- § 38— Oklawaha River, Florida; Kyle and Young Canal and “Morrison Landing extension” substituted
- § 39— Ollala Slough, Oregon
- § 40— One Hundred and Two River, Missouri
- § 41— Osage River, Missouri
- § 42— Platte River, Missouri
- § 43— Saint Marys River, Ohio and Indiana
- § 44— Sturgeon Bay, Illinois
- § 45— Swan Creek, Toledo, Ohio
- § 46— Tchula Lake, Mississippi
- § 47— Eagle Lake, Louisiana-Mississippi
- § 48— Noxubee River, Mississippi
- § 49— Bayou Saint John in New Orleans
- § 50— Turtle Bay and Turtle Bayou, Texas
- § 51— Scajaquada Creek, New York
- § 52— Park River, Connecticut
- § 53— Benton Harbor Canal, Michigan
- § 53a— Additional portion of Benton Harbor Canal, abandoned as navigable water
- § 54— Burr Creek, Bridgeport, Connecticut
- § 55— Bayou Savage (or Chantilly) in New Orleans
- § 56— Fort Point Channel and South Bay, Boston, Massachusetts
- § 57— Pike Creek, Wisconsin
- § 58— Acushnet River section of New Bedford and Fairhaven Harbor, Massachusetts
- § 59— West River in West Haven, Connecticut
- § 59a— Back Cove, Portland, Maine
- § 59b— Bayous Terrebonne and LeCarpe, Louisiana
- § 59c— East River, New York
- § 59c–1— East and Hudson Rivers, New York
- § 59c–2— East River, New York
- § 59c–3— Queens County, New York
- § 59d— River Raisin, Michigan
- § 59e— Bayou Lafourche, Louisiana
- § 59e–1— Additional portion of Bayou Lafourche, Louisiana
- § 59f— Boston Inner Harbor and Fort Point Channel, Massachusetts
- § 59g— Steele and Washington Bayous, and Lake Washington, Mississippi
- § 59h— San Francisco, California, Waterfront Area
- § 59i— Patapsco River, Maryland
- § 59j— Delaware River, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania; permanent structures
- § 59j–1— Declaration of nonnavigability for portions of the Delaware River
- § 59k— Wicomico River, Maryland
- § 59l— Nonapplicability of prohibitions and provisions for review and approval concerning wharves and piers
- § 59m— Lake Oswego, Oregon; Lake Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; and Lake George, New York
- § 59n— Hudson River, Hudson County, New Jersey
- § 59n–1— Caven Point, New Jersey
- § 59o— Hackensack River, Hudson County, New Jersey
- § 59p— Kenduskeag Stream, Penobscot County, Maine
- § 59q— Erie Basin, Buffalo Harbor, New York
- § 59q–1— Union Canal, Outer Buffalo Harbor, New York
- § 59r— Trent River, Craven County, North Carolina
- § 59s— Green River, Washington
- § 59t— Burnham Canal, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
- § 59u— Lawyer’s Ditch, Essex County, New Jersey
- § 59v— Middle River, Maryland
- § 59w— Norton Basin and Jamaica Bay, New York
- § 59x— Exemption from General Bridge Act of 1946
- § 59y— Declaration of nonnavigability for portions of Coney Island Creek and Gravesend Bay, New York
- § 59z— Declaration of nonnavigability of bodies of water in Ridgefield, New Jersey
- § 59aa— Nonnavigability of Wisconsin River
- § 59bb— Declaration of nonnavigability for portions of Lake Erie
- § 59bb–1— Declaration of nonnavigability for Lake Erie, New York
- § 59cc— Declaration of nonnavigability of portion of Hudson River, New York
- § 59dd— Declaration of nonnavigability of portions of Cleveland Harbor, Ohio
- § 59ee— Portion of Sacramento River Barge Canal declared to not be navigable waters of United States
- § 59ee–1— Declaration of nonnavigability for portion of Sacramento Deep Water Ship Channel
- § 59ff— Declaration of nonnavigability for portions of Pelican Island, Texas
- § 59gg— Declaration of nonnavigability for portions of Cuyahoga County, Ohio
- § 59hh— Declaration of nonnavigability for portion of Pelican Island, Texas
- § 59ii— Declaration of nonnavigability of a portion of the canal known as the James River and Kanawha Canal in Richmond, Virginia
- § 59jj— Designation of nonnavigability for portions of Gloucester County, New Jersey
- § 59kk— Wateree River
- § 59ll— Central Delaware River, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- § 59mm— Coalbank Slough deemed not navigable waters of the United States for certain purposes